Barbour, M. K., & Mulcahy, D. (2009, October). Time and responsibility: Examining the volunteer workload of school-based personnel in one distance education program. Roundtable presented at the annual convention of the Association for Educational Communication and Technology, Louisville, KY.
Historically, K-12 distance education in Newfoundland & Labrador largely worked due to the widely known, but rarely documented content-based assistance from school-based personnel. Currently, more rural schools find they must rely upon distance education to offer academic-level courses to students with a wide range of abilities, creating new responsibilities for teachers that have also gone undocumented. This study will document the duties and time required to provide support for this new model of distance education.
AECT 2009 - Time and Responsibility: Examining the Volunteer Workload of School-based Personnel in one Distance Education Program
1. Time and Responsibility: Examining the
Volunteer Workload of School-based Personnel
in One Distance Education Program
Michael Barbour, Wayne State University
Dennis Mulcahy, Memorial University of Newfoundland
2. Newfoundland and Labrador
• the island is 43,359 square miles, while
Labrador covers 112,826
• population was 505,469 in 2006
Census
– 551,795 in 1996 / 568,350 in 1986
• 294 schools in 2005-06
– 343 in 2000-01 / 472 in 1995-96
• 76,763 students in 2005-06
– 110,456 in 1995-96 / 142,332 in 1985-86
• average school size is 220 pupils
– 45% > 200 and 25% > 100
3. Centre for Distance Learning and Innovation
CDLI Statistics
2001- 2002- 2003- 2004- 2005- 2006- 2007- 2008-
02* 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
Number of
courses 10 18 25 30 33 32 38 37
Number of
teachers 5 18 23.5 25.5 27.5 - - -
Course
Registrations 200 1000 1200 1300 1650 1539 1787 1616
Percentage
passes N/A 88 90 90 88 - - -
* Pilot year
4. Centre for Distance Learning and Innovation
Synchronous – Online
• 30% to 80%, depending on
subject area
• taught via a virtual classroom
(e.g., Elluminate Live)
Asynchronous – Offline
• remainder of their time
• taught via a course
management system (e.g.,
WebCT/D2L)
• usually consists of
independent work from posted
homework or assignments or
from their textbooks
6. Mediating Teachers/Team
• Technical - to provide initial maintenance and trouble-
shooting for the CDLI computers (all major problems are
handled by a district-level technician or by the CDLI)
• Coach – to provide support (although not academic
support) in gaining the independent learning and self-
motivation skills that may be needed to succeed in the
online environment
• Administrative – to proctor tests and exams, monitor
student attendance and behavior, and provide supervision
• school administrator, technology teacher, secretary,
custodian, and/or a student enrolled in the CDLI (i.e., e-
tutor)
8. Sample
Schools M-Team Schools M-Team Completed Opted-Out Not
Members Participating Members responsive
Participating
District 1 10 34 - - - - -
District 2 32 83 18 46 16 7 22
District 3 33 102 33 102 17 27 58
District 4 21 62 20 58 15 9 34
District 5 2 3 2 3 0 1 2
Private 2 5 2 5 1 0 4
Schools
Totals 100 289 75 214 49 44 121
9. Sample
• 75% of the schools representing 74% of the m-teachers
• Response rate – 23%
• Opted out – 21%
• Unresponsive – 56%
• Administrative - 60.5%
• Technical - 23.3%
• Coach - 16.3%
10. Responsibilities
Often
• Monitoring the progress of distance learning students, including accepting e-
mail notification from the e-teacher which express concern regarding the
failure of a student to submit assignments, exams, etc. on time.
• Following-up with such students to ensure future compliance.
• Accepting grades and reports from the e-teacher and ensure that these get
entered in the students term/end of year report cards.
Sometimes
• Supervising distance learning students while they engage in online activities.
• Providing limited assistance to students who encounter difficulty in using
asynchronous communication tools (chat, discussion threads, e-mail, etc., web
browser, and learning management system).
• Meeting, as requested, with the e-teacher, web-based initiatives facilitator,
high school programme specialist.
11. Time:
Surveys
Task M-Teachers Time
Supervising tests/exams 90.0% 60 min
Tracking down missing 41.5% 35 min
assignments/homework
Recording attendance or other 36.6% 20 min
administrative data
Providing content-based tutoring 46.3% 40 min
Providing technology-based tutoring 48.8% 25 min
Providing technical trouble shooting 70.7% 30 min
General supervision 12..2% 60 min
Supervising science labs 12.2% 50 min
12. Time:
Weekly Logs
Task M-Teachers Average Time
Supervising tests/exams/class 5 teachers 80 min
16/16 weeks
Tracking down missing 2 teachers 2 min
assignments/homework 3/16 weeks
Recording attendance or other 3 teachers 3 min
administrative data 5/16 weeks
Providing content-based tutoring 3 teachers 15 min
4/16 weeks
Providing technology-based tutoring
Providing technical trouble shooting 5 teachers 29 min
13/16 weeks
Supervising science labs
Preparing and submitting tests/exams 6 teachers 19 min
16/16 weeks
13. Time:
Comparison
Task Survey Time Log Time 2004 Study
Supervising tests/exams/class 58 min 80 min 58 min
Tracking down missing 31 min 2 min 28 min
assignments/homework
Recording attendance or other 17 min 3 min 27 min
administrative data
Providing content-based tutoring 40 min 15 min 12 min
Providing technology-based tutoring 23 min - 30 min
Providing technical trouble shooting 37 min 29 min 81 min
Supervising science labs 60 min - -
Preparing and submitting 20 min 19 min -
tests/exams
14. Time:
Summary
Average 2.3/week per
m-teacher
CDLI utilizes 5X14
timetable
• 10 hours per 14 days
Average m-teacher spend
2/3 course slot on their
duties
15. System
How often do you access the any of your
student's course management systems?
• Never – 65%
• Couple of times a month – 15%
• Once a month – 10%
What do you access in the student's
course management systems?
• To check test dates and assignment
deadlines
• To check student marks
How often are you in communication with
e-teachers of your students?
• Couple of times a month – 39%
• Once a month – 22%
16. Discussion & Initial Conclusions
• m-teacher duties occupy significant amounts of
teacher time
– one teaching unit / 175 students (Shortall & Greene-
Fraize, 2007)
• Logs recorded less overall time
than surveys
• level of involvement hasn’t
decreased
– actually increased by ~50 minutes between 2004 &
2009 surveys
17. Future Research
• expand or repeat survey
– possible addition of District 1
• additional teacher logs &
interviews
• 6 m-teachers were
interviewed and recordings
are being transcribed
• creation of a web-based
orientation for m-teachers
– examination of the effects of that
orientation